Verapamil is used clinically in the treatment of various cardiac diseases including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Its long term effects on ventricular mass are not well known. In 11 conscious dogs heart rate, aortic and left ventricular pressures, cardiac output, a methoxamine induced stress ventricular function test and left ventriculography were performed. These variables were measured prior to and following a mean 7.2 month infusion of verapamil at 0.005 or 0.01 mg.kg-1.min-1 using a subcutaneously implanted pump. Resting haemodynamic variables and left ventricular ejection fraction [60(SD 6) v 55(6)%] were unchanged between baseline and chronic verapamil studies, but the slope of the methoxamine induced stress ventricular function test decreased from 3.9(0.8) to 2.1 (1.3). After verapamil was discontinued the mean slope of the stress ventricular function test returned to the baseline 4.0(1.7). Total ventricular weight increased 22% from 176.1(17.5) g.m-2 in controls to 215.6(29.5) g.m-2 (p less than 0.01) in the verapamil animals. The right ventricular weight increased 25% from 46(5.9) to 57.6(9.1) g.m-2 (p less than 0.01); the septum weight increased 26% from 42.5(4.1) to 53.7(7.2) g.m-2 (p less than 0.001); and the left ventricular free wall weight increased 19% from 87.4(9.8) to 103.9(15.7) g.m-2 (p less than 0.01). The increase in ventricular weights was not due to fibrosis or oedema since hydroxyproline contents and wet/dry ratios were not increased. In conclusion, a chronic infusion of verapamil in conscious dogs caused no change in resting haemodynamic variables but produced reversible depression of stress ventricular function and biventricular and septal hypertrophy.